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Mass telephony will spawn new services

More than two years ago, I had started this column by describing as the "Law of diminishing digital returns" the phenomenon under which your digital device will seem dumber as they days progress while smarter ones costing less hit the market. N Madhavan writes.

Updated on: May 15, 2011 09:15 PM IST
Hindustan Times | By
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More than two years ago, I had started this column by describing as the "Law of diminishing digital returns" the phenomenon under which your digital device will seem dumber as they days progress while smarter ones costing less hit the market.

HT Image
HT Image

A recent study shows how far this is going to change the world. Gurgaon-based knowledge process outsourcing (KPO) firm Evalueserve says that by 2015, about 70% of the world's handsets, accounting for some 4.8 billion handsets, will have an average price of less than $100 (Rs 4,400), and the annual demand for handsets that year will be about 2.58 billion, with replacements driving 94% of the demand.

By 2015, the share of smartphones will more than double to 30% from 14% in 2010, and replacement markets will account for 94% of the demand, says the study.

But the study notes that basic handsets costing under $30 will also grow sharply, and between the smartphones and the basic handsets, feature phones, which essentially involve Qwerty keyboards, cameras and other frills, will get squeezed.

Whatever the detail, the trend is clearly towards the "massification" of telephony, and by extension, the Internet, because dumber phones are getting Net-savvy, with handset makers, software firms and telecom operators working with each other to make that happen.

Evalueserve estimates that more than 50% of mobile subscribers will be from low and middle income countries while 84% of the new subscribers will be from these economies between 2010 and 2015.

And so, within a decade, pervasive computing and its fallouts would have reached out to the poorer sections of the planet. What fascinates one is a key takeaway: while voice calls will get cheaper, Internet or other data-based services will drive revenues. Expect a profusion of data-based ideas and services. The game, which began with ringtones and SMS votes, has just begun.

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
N Madhavan

While India saw heated protests and a debate last week over Net Neutrality -- the call to the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) for strictly separating content (apps) and carriage (data plans), the European Union’s Competition Commissioner took a step forward in another side of the business by charging Google with defying what is called “search neutrality”.

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